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Silver prices have barely budged in months, even as global silver demand looks to reach a record this year Global demand for silver is on the rise and expected to reach a record this year, offering an opportunity for investors to buy the metal at prices that have seen little change in the past six months.

“A compelling argument can be made that 2022 will be a good year for silver,” says Edmund Moy, former director of the United States Mint and senior IRA strategist for gold and silver dealer U.S. Money Reserve. “As the global economy recovers from the pandemic, expect to see silver demand rise from the industrial sector.”

“A compelling argument can be made that 2022 will be a good year for silver.”— Edmund Moy, U.S. Money Reserve Total global silver demand is forecast to climb by 8% to a record high of 1.112 billion ounces this year, according to the Silver Institute.

Based in part on analysis from precious-metals research consultancy Metals Focus, the Silver Institute said that the “exceptionally promising” outlook for silver demand is driven by record silver industrial fabrication, which includes electrical and electronic applications, as well as green technologies.

The Silver Institute forecasts growth of 5% this year for global industrial silver demand to a new high of 552 million ounces.

Industrial demand is half of total demand for silver, and should be responsible for about half of the price movement, says Robert Minter, director of ETF investment strategy at asset manager abrdn. The other half of demand comes from jewelry and investment use, where drivers are similar to gold, he says.

“Because of the demand sources, silver can be thought of as half gold, half copper,” says Minter. “Yet when we compared returns since the end of 2020, copper is up 28%, gold is down 2%, and silver is down 12%.” That implies silver prices should be much higher, he says.

For silver just to catch up to half of copper’s performance, that would imply a silver price near $25.50 an ounce, says Minter. On Feb. 16, silver futures SIH22, 1.14% SI00, 1.14% settled at $23.605.

Michael Cuggino, president and portfolio manager of the Permanent Portfolio Family of Funds, believes that 2021 served as a “basing and consolidating year” that provides a “good entry point for a long-term investor” in either silver or gold, both of which saw prices fall last year as inflation began to emerge but was “explained away as transitory.”

Still, silver futures have been generally stuck in a less than $5-an-ounce trading range since August. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/silver-prices-have-barely-budged-in-months-even-as-global-silver-demand-looks-to-reach-a-record-this-year-11645118725

Silver prices have barely budged in months, even as global silver demand looks to reach a record this year Global demand for silver is on the rise and expected to reach a record this year, offering an opportunity for investors to buy the metal at prices that have seen little change in the past six months. “A compelling argument can be made that 2022 will be a good year for silver,” says Edmund Moy, former director of the United States Mint and senior IRA strategist for gold and silver dealer U.S. Money Reserve. “As the global economy recovers from the pandemic, expect to see silver demand rise from the industrial sector.” “A compelling argument can be made that 2022 will be a good year for silver.”— Edmund Moy, U.S. Money Reserve Total global silver demand is forecast to climb by 8% to a record high of 1.112 billion ounces this year, according to the Silver Institute. Based in part on analysis from precious-metals research consultancy Metals Focus, the Silver Institute said that the “exceptionally promising” outlook for silver demand is driven by record silver industrial fabrication, which includes electrical and electronic applications, as well as green technologies. The Silver Institute forecasts growth of 5% this year for global industrial silver demand to a new high of 552 million ounces. Industrial demand is half of total demand for silver, and should be responsible for about half of the price movement, says Robert Minter, director of ETF investment strategy at asset manager abrdn. The other half of demand comes from jewelry and investment use, where drivers are similar to gold, he says. “Because of the demand sources, silver can be thought of as half gold, half copper,” says Minter. “Yet when we compared returns since the end of 2020, copper is up 28%, gold is down 2%, and silver is down 12%.” That implies silver prices should be much higher, he says. For silver just to catch up to half of copper’s performance, that would imply a silver price near $25.50 an ounce, says Minter. On Feb. 16, silver futures SIH22, 1.14% SI00, 1.14% settled at $23.605. Michael Cuggino, president and portfolio manager of the Permanent Portfolio Family of Funds, believes that 2021 served as a “basing and consolidating year” that provides a “good entry point for a long-term investor” in either silver or gold, both of which saw prices fall last year as inflation began to emerge but was “explained away as transitory.” Still, silver futures have been generally stuck in a less than $5-an-ounce trading range since August. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/silver-prices-have-barely-budged-in-months-even-as-global-silver-demand-looks-to-reach-a-record-this-year-11645118725

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

I trade stocks on the side and I have made tens of thousands of dollars.

I'm good at this and I will retire in 15 months.

(Appeal to Authority logical fallacy but I know what I'm doing)

Silver is NOT about to explode and has no technical indication of recovering in price, currently. There is no support at this level to indicate a bounce.

Unless there is a fundamental reason (the securities technical term, not layman term) for price to go up, all technicals do not support the idea that silver has even bottomed out in the current downtrend.

[–] 2 pts

I say when the manipulation of paper silver stops, which it will when everyone is busy getting out of the market as fast as they can when the bubble finally pops, the real value/price of real silver will set new highs for the metal. And that is even before industrial silver requirements are added. There are more stackers now than ever before. Will it stay up when it pops? Probably not as many will sell.

[–] 1 pt

What are you eying to buy in the near term?

[–] 1 pt (edited )

Nothing. I stopped swing trading. I day trade. Because I don't want to deal with the stress of the market acting a fool.

Day trading is much harder than investing or swing trading, sure. But once you get good at it, you can make more money and faster. Just takes more time and absolute concentration while you do it. You can't be fucking around on your phone, watching vids, you're watching charts and scanners.

[–] 1 pt

Can you recommend any sites or platforms for learning more and wetting the beak?